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Subject: 
Re: bridge designs for big space MOCs
Newsgroups: 
lugnet.space
Date: 
Wed, 9 Feb 2000 22:45:11 GMT
Viewed: 
929 times
  
I believe that LEGO spaceships _never_ have enough terminals in them. I have a
MOC stuntfighter (sort of based on the [really, really old] 6861 X-1 Patrol
Craft) which uses both an old-style monitor brick and a control brick, as well
as a pair of control sticks (what's a nimble fighter without a flightstick? A
shuttlecraft.) Of course, the control sticks were a 'modern' addition, as we
didn't have such things in the olden days.

-Cheese

In lugnet.space, Paul Davidson writes:
I was wondering how some of the minifig spaceship creators here like
designing their ship bridges.  Most Lego ships only have small one-man
cockpits, with a little computer console or some levers.  My own ship under
construction, the Nautilus (http://theforce.net/tinman/nautilus), has a
large Star Trek-style bridge with a viewscreen, captain's chair in the
middle, and twelve other chairs and computer stations surrounding him.

I was just curious as to what other design philosophies others use in design
bridges (or maybe you don't even have a bridge!).

--


Paul Davidson



Message is in Reply To:
  bridge designs for big space MOCs
 
I was wondering how some of the minifig spaceship creators here like designing their ship bridges. Most Lego ships only have small one-man cockpits, with a little computer console or some levers. My own ship under construction, the Nautilus ((URL) (...) (25 years ago, 8-Feb-00, to lugnet.space)

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